2019_EJRNL_PP_M__MAGNINI_1.pdf
Terbatas Ratnasari
» ITB
Terbatas Ratnasari
» ITB
When a confined long gas bubble rises in a vertical tube in a cocurrent liquid flow, its
translational velocity is the result of both buoyancy and mean motion of the liquid. A thin
film of liquid is formed on the tube wall and its thickness is determined by the interplay
of viscous, inertial, capillary and buoyancy effects, as defined by the values of the Bond
number (Bo ? ?gR2/? with ? being the liquid density, g the gravitational acceleration,
R the tube radius, and ? the surface tension), capillary number (Cab ? ?Ub/? with Ub
being the bubble velocity and ? the liquid dynamic viscosity), and Reynolds number
(Reb ? 2?UbR/?). We perform experiments and numerical simulations to investigate
systematically the effect of buoyancy (Bo = 0–5) on the shape and velocity of the bubble
and on the thickness of the liquid film for Cab = 10?3–10?1 and Reb = 10?2–103. A
theoretical model, based on an extension of Bretherton’s lubrication theory, is developed
and utilized for parametric analyses; its predictions compare well with the experimental
and numerical data. This study shows that buoyancy effects on bubbles rising in a cocurrent
liquid flow make the liquid film thicker and the bubble rise faster, when compared to the
negligible gravity case. In particular, gravitational forces impact considerably the bubble
dynamics already when Bo < 0.842, with Bocr = 0.842 being the critical value below
which a bubble does not rise in a stagnant liquid in a circular tube. The liquid film thickness
and bubble velocity in a liquid coflow may vary by orders of magnitude as a result of small
changes of Bo around this critical value. The reduction of the liquid film thickness for
increasing values of the Reynolds numbers, usually observed for Reb 102 when Bo 1,
becomes more evident at larger Bond numbers. Buoyancy effects also have a significant
influence on the features of the undulation appearing near the rear meniscus of the bubble,
as they induce a substantial increase in its amplitude and decrease in its wavelength.
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